“A fascinating appraisal of Hunt’s work which superbly describes the artist’s work in its historical and biographical context. Jacobi’s analysis casts a great deal of light on the prejudices of earlier critics, she also usefully, assesses the artist’s originality in the light of recent scholarship on the cultural pillars of the nineteenth century The paintings reproduced here, in all their vivid frightfulness, suddenly seem all the more fascinating as a result of this captivating book.”Timothy Brittain-Catlin, The Tablet